JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- Jake Fromm was a little late to the after-party.

He was in the third and final wave of Georgia players leaping into the stands at the "World's Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party."

It was a fitting spot for Fromm considering how effective he's been on third down against Florida.

Fromm threw for 279 yards and two touchdowns, including a 52-yarder to an uncovered Lawrence Cager in the fourth quarter, and the No. 8 Bulldogs beat the sixth-ranked Gators 24-17 on Saturday.

It was Georgia's third consecutive victory in the Southeastern Conference rivalry and sixth in the past nine years.

Fromm was the main reason for the past two. He has five touchdown passes in two years against Florida, with four of them coming on third down.

"When Jake has time, he's really efficient," Georgia coach Kirby Smart said. "I was so proud of him this game."

Fromm's most important throw came on a third-and-7 play with a little more than two minutes remaining. The Gators (7-2, 4-2) rallied twice to make it a one-score game in the final quarter, and Fromm needed one more completion to end any chance of a comeback.

"We had the belief the whole game that we just needed the one stop, and we didn't get that, unfortunately," Florida linebacker David Reese said.

Fromm completed 20 of 30 passes, including one to Dominick Blaylock for a 3-yard score on third down in the first quarter.

Fromm struggled in his past two games, both at home, but played considerably better against Florida for the second straight season.

"There's been a lot of outside noise, and this has been a challenge to our guys to not listen to the outside noise but to really gel within our locker room," Fromm said. "To come out and respond and play the way we did today, it really shows what our guys are made of, their hearts and what we mean to each other."

Cager finished with seven receptions for 132 yards, both career highs.

D'Andre Swift added 86 yards rushing to help Georgia (7-1, 4-1) move a step closer to winning the SEC's Eastern Division for the third consecutive year and strengthen their College Football Playoff résumé.

The Gators, who now need lots of help to win the East, looked lost on both sides of the ball most of the afternoon.

Florida abandoned an ineffective ground game early, and its defense got little pressure on Fromm -- even with disruptive pass-rushers Jon Greenard and Jabari Zuniga back for the first time in weeks.

"The only people we can be disappointed with are ourselves because they didn't do anything we didn't expect them to do," said Trask, who completed 21 of 33 passes for 257 yards and two scores.

Trask gave his team life down the stretch. He escaped a collapsing pocket and found Van Jefferson for a 23-yard touchdown pass and later found Freddie Swain in the flat to make it seven-point game with 3:11 remaining.

But Fromm and Wolf closed it out.

"It was amazing, amazing," Swift said. "We're an elite team on third down, and we got to show it today."

Third downs proved to be the difference.

Georgia converted 12 of 18 chances on the all-important down; Florida was 2-of-9.

"Needed to stay on the field better on offense and get off the field better on defense," Florida coach Dan Mullen said.

THE TAKEAWAY

Georgia: After consecutive lackluster performances at home, the Bulldogs looked much more like a team that can make the CFP.

Florida: The Gators rallied three times earlier this season to win after trailing in the fourth -- against Miami , Kentucky and South Carolina -- but they couldn't do it again.

OFFICIATING COMPLAINTS

Mullen walked off the field with SEC officials at halftime, still miffed by a number of questionable calls.

There was a no-call on what looked like pass interference against tight end Kyle Pitts on a fourth-down play. There was a pass interference call on cornerback CJ Henderson when the ball seemed uncatchable. And officials let Cager's 12-yard catch stand upon review in the second quarter after it appeared the ball hit the ground before the receiver got control. Fromm's first TD pass came three plays later.

"I saw what you saw,'' Mullen said. "I asked the official, but they said that decision's made in Birmingham. So they couldn't even give me an explanation.''

POLL IMPLICATIONS

Georgia should jump Florida in the next AP Top 25 college football poll .

KEY INJURIES

Georgia defensive end Malik Herring limped off the field in the fourth quarter.

Florida linebacker Jeremiah Moon left the field and walked into the locker room in the first half.

UP NEXT

Georgia: Hosts Missouri next Saturday. The Bulldogs have won five in a row in the series.

Florida: Hosts Vanderbilt, which has dropped five straight and 27 of 28 in the series.